Miriam Pozen Prize for outstanding contributions to financial policy
The $200,000 prize, the first ever awarded by MIT in the area of financial policy, will be given biennially starting in the spring of 2020.
The $200,000 prize, the first ever awarded by MIT in the area of financial policy, will be given biennially starting in the spring of 2020.
Laura Kodres, will teach a new course, “Navigating Regulation in the Post-Global Crisis World," this fall.
The team will be honored at the GCFP annual conference in September in Cambridge, MA.
We push the boundaries of finance to solve complex problems and fuel progress in the world through the MIT finance ecosystem – a unique global network of people, programs, research, and partnerships.
A recent topic of debate in the U.S. budget community centers on how the federal government should estimate the cost of providing loans to various borrowers such as students and homebuyers. Currently costs are assessed assuming that the government’s cost of capital is equal to the Treasury rate. Pro...
Persistent racial and ethnic disparities in access to homeownership have created the need to examine whether—and how—to change aspects of the complex and rapidly changing housing US finance system.
More information about educational initiatives and affiliated courses at the Golub Center.